Brain Mapping Unit, Department of Psychiatry, Behavioural and Clinical Neuroscience Institute, University of Cambridge Cambridge, UK.
Front Integr Neurosci. 2013 Jan 25;6:128. doi: 10.3389/fnint.2012.00128. eCollection 2012.
A growing consensus in social cognitive neuroscience holds that large portions of the primate visual brain are dedicated to the processing of social information, i.e., to those aspects of stimuli that are usually encountered in social interactions such as others' facial expressions, actions, and symbols. Yet, studies of social perception have mostly employed simple pictorial representations of conspecifics. These stimuli are social only in the restricted sense that they physically resemble objects with which the observer would typically interact. In an equally important sense, however, these stimuli might be regarded as "non-social": the observer knows that they are viewing pictures and might therefore not attribute current mental states to the stimuli or might do so in a qualitatively different way than in a real social interaction. Recent studies have demonstrated the importance of such higher-order conceptualization of the stimulus for social perceptual processing. Here, we assess the similarity between the various types of stimuli used in the laboratory and object classes encountered in real social interactions. We distinguish two different levels at which experimental stimuli can match social stimuli as encountered in everyday social settings: (1) the extent to which a stimulus' physical properties resemble those typically encountered in social interactions and (2) the higher-level conceptualization of the stimulus as indicating another person's mental states. We illustrate the significance of this distinction for social perception research and report new empirical evidence further highlighting the importance of mental state attribution for perceptual processing. Finally, we discuss the potential of this approach to inform studies of clinical conditions such as autism.
社会认知神经科学领域越来越达成共识,认为灵长类动物的大部分视觉大脑专门用于处理社会信息,即那些在社交互动中通常遇到的刺激方面,例如他人的面部表情、动作和符号。然而,社会知觉研究大多采用了同类的简单图像表示。这些刺激仅在有限的意义上是社会性的,因为它们在物理上类似于观察者通常会与之交互的物体。然而,从同样重要的意义上说,这些刺激可能被视为“非社会性的”:观察者知道他们正在观看图片,因此可能不会将当前的心理状态归因于刺激,或者可能以与真实社交互动不同的方式归因于刺激。最近的研究表明,对于社会感知处理,这种对刺激的更高层次的概念化是很重要的。在这里,我们评估了实验室中使用的各种类型的刺激与现实社交互动中遇到的物体类别之间的相似性。我们区分了实验刺激可以在日常社交环境中匹配社交刺激的两种不同水平:(1)刺激的物理属性与社交互动中通常遇到的属性的相似程度,以及(2)作为指示他人心理状态的刺激的更高层次的概念化。我们说明了这种区别对于社会感知研究的意义,并报告了新的实证证据,进一步强调了心理状态归因对感知处理的重要性。最后,我们讨论了这种方法为自闭症等临床状况的研究提供信息的潜力。